Bk 43UUa1 ~E~ai1F SUNNY Nigh-80' Low55 Mostly sunny and warm today and Sunday Seventy-One Years of Editorial Freedom ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1961 SEVEN CENTS SIX PAGES Rusk Reports Little Progress Made; Kennedy Reaffirms Wbest's Position WASHINGTON (Y)-Soviet Foreign Minister 'Andrei A. Gromyko met with President-John F. Kennedy for more than two hours on the Berlin crisis lTate yesterday and said afterwards he stressed the im- portance of a peace treaty with Germany. While Gromyko, described the parley as useful, neither he nor Secretary of State Dean Rusk gave any evidence of a breakthrough in the United States-Soviet conversations which have made little progress so far. Search for Talks Rusk reported the White House conference was a continuation of inconclusive meetings he has held Respite Seen As Red, Boss Boeks Downil BERLIN (MP-The Communists indicated last night that the West may get 'a; breathing spell in the tenseEast-West struggle over-Ber- lin. Soviet Premier N i k i t a A. Khrushchev, his roving deputy Anastas I. Mikoyan and the Com- munist chief of East Germany, Walter Ulbricht, contributed to the impression that a showdown on Berlin may be postponed be- yond the end of the year. In the past Khrushchev has warned re- peatedly that he would sign a peace treaty with East Germany before the end of the year, en- dangering Western access rights to isolated Berlin. But in statements on the 12th anniversary of Communist East Germany's emergence as a gov- ernment, the phrase "this year" was dropped from the standard demand for a peace treaty.' Mikoyan- and Ulbricht spoke at the opening ,of the' anniversary clebrations:' °Khrushchev sent a message of greetings from Moscow describing the new Communist control measures against escapees from East Germany as "a con- siderable contribution to the cause of peace," Peae! MOSCOW (Am) - Moscow Uni- versity students banged on their desks and shouted down their professors yesterday in order to keep American and West Euro- pean peace marchers talking. The incident was reported publicly by the official Soviet news agency Tass. University authorities and Soviet peace committee officials had tried to break up the ses- sion when the students pro- tested. "Let, 'em talk," shouted the 200 students present. "We don't agree with them, but let us hear them anyway."~ UNIQUE: Delta Plans Dedication' Delta 'College, the newest com- munity college in the state, will feature David Rockefeller, art col- lector and banker, -at its dedica- tion program; which lasts tomor- row through Wednesday. "Education the Key to the F u- ture of Higher Education," will be Rockefeller's topic for his speech Monday night. He is the brother of Gov. Nelson Rockefel- ler. Presently, Delta is a two-year college,, but a second: attempt to Gmake it a 'four-year institution Smay be introduced in the next Legislature. The eight million dol- lar college has an enrollment of 1,856 students. Supported by taxes from the college districts of Saginaw, Bay and Midland counties, Delta is us- ing the most advanced electronic teaching aids including closed cir- cuit television. It has been called one of the nation's leading ex- periments in higher education. rThe college offers two distinct - courses. The College of Letters is for students seeking a degree and with Gromyko in New York in a Ssearch for evidence of Kremlin willingness for negotiations on the explosive Berlin issue on terms the Western powers will accept. Yesterday's meeting "was inter- esting and that's all you can say about it," Rusk said. Presidential Press Secretary Pierre Salinger had nothing to add after the conference between Ken- nedy, Rusk, Gromyko and a hand- ful of top advisers. No Plans Both Rusk and Gromyko said they had no plans for a further get-together before Gromyko re- turns to Moscow. Gromyko said he will leave New York for home on Monday. Gromyko's stress on a peace treaty with Germany is along familiar Moscow lines. Rusk has been trying to find out, without much success so far, Just how the Soviet-proposed peace treaty with Communist East Germany would affect West. Berlin rights which the West deems vital. Kennedy for his part was re- ported to have re - emphasized Western determination not to yield Berlin rights. His emphasis to Gromyko was expected to be re- layed by the Soviet Minister to Khrushchev. School Ousts Protesters McCOMB, Miss. ('-Supt. R. S. Stmpson said yesterday 118 Ne- gro students who participated in a protest march to City Hall have been suspended from school. Simpson said the students would be readmitted Tuesday on a pro- bation basis. They walked out of a school assembly program Wed- nesday in protest against school officials not immediately re-in- stating two Negro sit-in demon- strators. The superintendent said Brenda Travis. 16, and Isaac Lewis, 21,. the sit-inners, would not be al- lowed to re-enter now. He said Lewis dropped out of school last year. F The two were arrested Aug. 30 for a sit-in attempt at the Mc- Comb bus station and were releas- ed last Saturday on $1,000 bonds. Police announced the arrest of Curtis C. Bryant, president of the Pike County branch of the Na- tional Association for the Ad- vancement of Colored People. He was charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor girl. Officers arrested the 118 Ne- groes and one white man Wednes- day for demonstrating on the steps of City Hall after a march through the city with signs' calling for equal rights.. Mayor C. H. Douglas of Mc- Comb invited Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy to. visit McComb to see the conditions first hand. "The charge that our colored citi- zens are under a reign of terror is absolutely false," he said. The charge had been made by the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. of At- lanta. Arml LessonOne: 'M' Offense Uses Wing-T Sportswriter Tells Of Great Strategein By TOM WEBBER A startling fact that has come to the fore that, there are some people on campus who do not know what a wing-T is. No, it is not the newest Thun-, derbird' with fins. Nor is it some sort of migratory bird, although it does at times. take flight. Bu rather, it is the Michigan football team's basic offensive style of at- tack. Thus enlightened, girls, sissies, squares, and uninformed sports- men, stand ready to digest the intricacies of the wing-T. (No fair for Michigan State sympathizers reading any farther.) Stolen From Iowa The wing-T is a 'formation pop- ularized by Iowa's Forest Evashev- ski, '40. which takes advantage of the single wing blocking power, utilizes the option runs of the split-T, _has its own devastating end runs and has all the explo- siveness of the short punt forma- tion. By examining the diagram close- ly, one can see that the basic variance from a straight-T for- mation is that the right halfback (19) stations himself 'behind his own end (either inside or outside depending on the play), instead of the normal place beside the full- back. The left halfback (43) also moves to his left a little more than in the T. Backfield Motion This right half, or more coi- monly called the wingback (hence the wing-T), often moves in mo- tion behind the fullback before the ball is snapped. From this position he can,. take a handoff from the quarterback and either cut back into the line or continue the sweep around his own left end. Naturally the quarterback will also fake a handoff to the wingback sometimes, to throw the defense (the other side) offstride. When he doesn't go in motion, the wingback is in a good posi- tion to move downfield for a pass, or to throw a key block. As evi- denced by the diagram he can often get a good angle on a de- fensive lineman for blocking. The presence of the wingback also allows the possibility for re- verses. An example of a simple reverse would be if the quarter- back handed the ball to the left half (43) going around his own1 right end. The left half would then hand the ball to the wing-7 back moving in the opposite di- rection. And now for the diagram. The1 numbers are authentic and the; names are used to help the in- nocent. (Number X is really Todd1 Grant, who really wears number 59. The X is football coaches' no- tation for the center.) In this play Dave Glinka (24)1 takes the snap, moves back and hands the ball off to Bennie Mc-; Rae (43). While this is happening it is the job of the linemen to open a hole in the line.1 Starting from the left of the1 line, Scott Maentz (96) moves downfield to block, should McRae get past the line of scrimmage. John Houtman '(57) and Grant See WING BACK, Page 6 7 ........... .. .>..:...... .,~.J... DalyDveAirw EVERYDA SECRETPLAY-AtypicalMichign Play rom thi ingtofnshosBene:c (43 tainga hndff romDav Glnk (2) ad sirtngrigt ed.fr.wathe.ope.wil.b.a touhdon Te Wlveine wil se hei wig-Toffnseagans Ary'slonsom.en.ofens.i this.aternoo's.gam.at.Mihigan.tadiu . Th.nmer.cresod .o.hseo.te.ihia - erseys.:..i _?iix;: ii:;:<; ~25 i-: ;: : Injuries Hit Line, O'onnellLst Two ,Guards Sidelined by Injury; Wolverines Boast Weight Edge By MIKE BURNS Sports Editor\ With one highly-touted opponent down,- Michigan faces na- tionally-ranked Army at the Stadium today, only this time the Wolverines rate as, unanimous favorites. Michigan will be out to repeat the solid trouncings they gave the Black Knights of the Hudson in 1955 and 1956, the last time the two rivals met on the gridiron. But they will be without the services of two key linemen in last weekend's rout of UCLA. Right guards Joe O'Donnell, and Lou Pavloff will be on the sidelines today and starting left " - tackle John Houtman was on the doubtful list. O'Donnell suffered hiln rcueo i etam a last week, which was thought toy be only a bruise at first. Pavloffrwilpoaystouthses St A d as he did last year with a knee injury. rT'-T 1 - al oenes 0 0ig i TAXES NOW 'A JOY': 4 ~English' Used in New 1040. By STERLING F. GREEN Associated Press Staff Writer The new, simplified, two-page income tax form 1040 had its coming-out party at Internal Rev- enue Service yesterday. IRS Commissioner Mortimer M. Caplin, displaying the form at a news conference, acknowledged it won't make tax paying a joy. But it is more readable, better' arranged, prin'ted in bigger type on higher quality paper. And it substitutes plain English wherever' possible for technical and legal language. Replaces Forms The form will be used for 1961 returns, replacing both the old Local Issues Hamper End Of Auto Strike DETROIT (A")-Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers Un- ion bargained for three hours yesterday without making any substantial progress in their ef- forts to end the strike of 120,000 Ford workers. The negotiators said, however, they clarified technical points in contract language covering sup- plemental unemployment compen- sation, pensions and insurance. A subcommittee studying skilled trades problems reported lack of agreement. Malcolm L. Denise, Ford vice- president for labor relations, and Walter P. Reuther, UAW presi- dent,, led their respective bargain- ing teams in an overall study of the strike issues following a one- day recess. They agreed to meet, again at 10 a.m. today. Ford and the UAW had reach- ed agreement on economic mat- ters-such as wages and fringe benefits-before the strike began Tuesday. They became bogged down on the non-economic issues -such as production standards- and on local issues involving Ford installations across the country. 1040 and 1040-W for the millions of individual income tax payers who get less than $200 of their income from dividends and inter- est. It will be mailed out in December in a remodeled tax instruction book with perforated pages, so that taxpayers need remove only the sheets they need instead of the entire 16-page center section. Taxpayers who have more than $200 of -income from dividends. or interest, and those who must re- port income from farming, part- nerships, businesses, annuities or capital gains, will have to attach the appropriate sheet or sheets to form 1040. Serve Bulk But Caplin said the new 1040 will serve the great bulk of tax- payers whose income comes mainly from wages or salaries, including the 7.5 million persons who last year used form 1040-W. That was the supposedly simpli- fied form introduced a few years ago. It did not work out well, tax men reported, because it wasn't so simple after all, was unfamiliar to most taxpayers, and presented a confusing choice of forms. IRS is retaining the simplest form of all; the punch card return, 1040-A. This may be used, how- ever, only by taxpayers with less than $10,000 of total income. Drop Items The new 1040 is so arranged that all the tax computation is done on page 1. Almost every line has been dropped out entirely. The question about whether you owe any federal income tax for previous years no longer appears, but this doesn't open any new tax loophole. The commissioner re- marked: "That information is available to us. "As long as the tax form has to mirror the tax laws, we can't have complete simplification," he said. -Soviet's* Plan:' Abolish Taxes In Five Years MOSCOW (A') -- A *government spokesman said yesterday that as a result of the latest income tax cuts two -thirds of the Soviet Union's industrial workers are get- ting wage hikes ranging from a few points up to 26 per cent. Alexander Volkov, chairman of the State Committee on Labor and Wages, said the major increases are going to lower-paid workers. The increases were accomplished through a combination of wage boosts and tax decrease, he said. The government said Thursday that the second stage of its Five Year Plan to abolish income tax went into effect Oct. 1. It abolished taxes on workers earning up to 60 rubles a month and cut taxes by 40 per cent on incomes of 61 to 70 rubles a month. The official ruble rate is, one for $1.11, the free market rate is 40 cents. Houtman To Start Houtman was removed from the UCLA game as, a precautionary measure with a leg injury but it may be more serious than it appeared Monday. However, Hout- man. was running with the first string in final practice yesterday and will probably start. Sophomores Dave Kurtz and Del Nolan will be moved up to the first ranks to take over for O'Donnell and Pavloff. The two sophs are about 10-2 0 lbs. lighter than O'Donnell and shorter on the experience end, as well, but both have been showing up well in practice. Tom Keating, 220-b. sophomore, will be available to fill Houtman's shoes if the junior should reinjure his leg. The Wolverines out-weigh the Cadets by 14.lbs. per nian, despite tha substitutions, which should be a good omen. Last week the Maize and Blue averaged better than three pounds heavier than UCLA. Top Linemnan Senior tackle Jon Schopf, who was named the nation's outstand- ing lineman last week by Sports Illustrated, will also be in. top shape to anchor the line. He was favoring a weak'ankle in part of the ULCA game. Although nationally-ranked in the top 20 teams, the Cadets have yet to meet a football squad even approaching the Wolverines, who are ranked eighth and ninth by the wire services. Victories over weak Richmond and Boston Uni- versity have provided the tests for Army so far and the Black Knights won handily in each case. Last week the Terriers from Bean- town fell by a 31-7 count. Lonesome End Army, will- feature, its original "lonesome end" again this season, with Paul Zmuida in the starring role. The 180-lb. .Zmuida has caught only two passes for 16' yards in two games but poses as a constant threat from his un- usual position. Army Coach Dale Hall, in his third year, has brought the end back to the huddle this season and instituted the man in motion to give the Cadets a more versatile and deceptive offense. This game should provide an interesting con- trast from the single-wing attack of UCLA last week. The Cadets use the run-pass option series as their basic of- fense, but ' despite the lonesome end the Army has relied primarily on a rushing attack. Quarterback Dick Eckert is the key man in both rushing and passing,lHe has completed 9 of 22 aerial attempts See MICHIGAN, Page 6 Troops. May Aid Viet Nam WASHINGTON OP)-The Unit- ed States considered yesterday the possibility of sending American troops'to South Viet Nam in the face of increasing Communist at- tacks against the government. High State Department sources made this known, while State De- partment spokesman Joseph Reap refused to rule out the possibility 10Educ ation WASHINGTON (om-The Ameri- can Council on Education, acting after a sharp rebuke from Secre- tary' of Welfare Abraham A. Ribi- coff, took a first tentative step yesterday, toward support of a program of general Federal Aid to the nation's schools. r This would be a major change in policy for the influential council, which is primarily concerned with higher education, and' it, was de- cided to give the idea more study. The council did, however, call' on the federal government for greatly increased financial support' of colleges and universities. This is precisely the sort of t"in Ribicoff criticized Thursday. The cabinet member told the 1,000 top -college officials attend- ing the Council's annual meeting they didn't really care about edu- cation as a whole, but only their particular part of it., Ribicoff said the Council should: have thrown its weight behind the, administration's proposals for fed- eral grants for classroom construc- tion and teachers' salaries. In a panel session after Ribicoff spoke .Thursday, between 75 and -100 educators agreed unanimously that Ribicoff was right, and that the Council should support. federal' aid for grade and high schools. Charles Dobbins, staff associate of the Council, said the committee on Federal Relations may take up the proposed resolution when it meets next month.I ' If the committee and the execu- tive committee approve it, it could become Council Policy immediate- ly, or it might be left to a poll of the membership, he said. Governor Still Seeks Smith, Replacement LANSING (A)- Gov. John . Swainson refused to speculate yesterday on the name 'of his ap- pointment to the State Supreme Court to succeed Justice Talbot' Smith., Smith submitted his resignation to the governor effective Tuesday,' the day he will be sworn in as a federal judge in the Eastern is- trict of Michigan., He was givens an interim appointment by Presi- dent John F. Kennedy and still must be confirmed by the Senate.' Swainson termed the resigna- tion "a very severe loss to the Su- preme Court bench." In response to at question, Swainson said he did not think' previous judicial experience was, necessary for the appointment. it will be his first appointment to the State Supreme Court. The executive. office has said a successor probably will be named within a week. Those mentioned as potential successors to Smith included Atty. Gen. Paul. L. Adams, Aud. Gen. Otis M. Smith; William K. Jack-.' son, banker and University regent; and Circuit Judges Michael Car- land of Shiawassee County and Rayburn's Condition Grave; Johnson Expresses Concern DALLAS, Tex {gyp) - Close associates said yesterday Speaker of the House tam Rayburn, suffering from incurable cancer, may be returned to his home this weekend. Rayburn is expected to go from Baylor Hospital in 'Dallas back to Bonham, Tex. Physicians have already said his condition is such that no surgery is contemplated. Rayburn's spirits were reported better yesterday and he was resting comfortably, still uninformed of the gravity of his condition,- <"an associate said. Vice-President Lyndon Johnson, long-time poli- tical ally of the 79-year-old Ray- burn, visited for an hour and a half in the House speaker's ni da i s seventh-floor -suite. Johnson emerged solemn-faced and told reporters Rayburn's con- dition "is a great personal tragedy WAY OF LIFE: Dean Cites Medical Sta, By JOHN McREYNOLDS "Medicine is a better way of life than any other if a person is willing to devote his life' to it," Dean Emertis Albert C. Furs- tenburg of the Medical School said yesterday in a lecture, "Medi- cine as a Career."' Furstenburg was dean of the school from 1935 until 1919 and was the fourth person appointed sary to acquaint the student with ( are often combined in universityE the qualities of human welfare and social betterment; 2) A strongly motivated individual with reasons behind his will to work and 3) One who can read, and comprehend. "The medical school can only teach the students the means of learning. A graduated doctor must devote himself to medicine in research centers, such as the Uni- versity. Furstenburg, generally known in all medical circles as one of the leaders of his profession, said that new doctors would have little to worry about in the case of socialized medical care. "I am confident that the doctor will not to Lady Bird (Mrs. Johnson) and myself and every other American." The 1 p.m. medical bulletin said in part: "Physicians advised that there is still no change in the general condition of Speaker Sam Ray- burn . . . he seems somewhat better today than he did yester- day. He is still resting comfort- :? L MR-